Raila Odinga Drops Out Of The Presidential Debate That Is Set For Tuesday, July 29th
Azimio La Umoja One Deputy President William Ruto, the major challenger in the upcoming presidential debate scheduled for Tuesday, July 29, is Raila Odinga’s top rival from Kenya.
Joining DP Ruto on stage would be “a dangerous idea,” according to Mr. Odinga’s presidential campaign headquarters, which described Ruto as a politician who “would do and say anything” to obtain power.
“… he has become desperate. He is a man who has no regard for ethics, public morals, or shame. That is why he has demanded that the debate not focus on corruption, integrity, ethics, and governance — the key existential questions that Kenya faces. These issues sit at the core of the Azimio campaign,” said the secretariat’s spokesperson Prof. Makau Mutua.
“Any debate devoid of these questions would be an insult to the intelligence of Kenyans. That is why we do not intend to share a national podium with a person who lacks basic decency.”
The campaign headquarters announced that Mr. Odinga and his running mate in the August 9 election, Martha Karua, will hold a televised town hall in Nairobi to interact with people instead of the “conventional debate.”
“It would be a colossal mistake to reward such a person with a national debate…. In lieu of a traditional debate, we plan to take part in a televised town hall at Jericho Social Hall in Nairobi’s Eastlands with ordinary Kenyans to offer our solutions to the challenges facing the country and common people,” said Prof. Mutua.
“(Mr.Odinga and Ms. Karua) will answer questions put to them by the people of Kenya openly, honestly, and free from what would otherwise be nothing more than empty self-serving political theater.”
The campaign team for DP Ruto demanded on Thursday that the time allotments for the various topics that would be covered in the discussion on Tuesday be made public.
Hussein Mohammed, the communications director for Ruto’s presidential campaign, urged the moderators to give each topic equal time and “equally enable candidates a fair opportunity to address it” in a letter to the Presidential Debate Secretariat.
The team claimed during the Deputy Presidential Candidates debate on Tuesday, July 19 crucial time was wasted on issues that are of not much interest to Kenyans.
“We note with dismay that an overwhelming allocation of time was devoted to canvassing personality, political relationships and similarly trivial pursuits at the expense of the issues that Kenyans demand and deserve to know from the campaigns. We regret to observe that a crucial opportunity was therefore laid to utter waste,” added Mohammed.